|
Subject:
Wild Turkey Federation to Invest $76,150 in Kansas Projects
ALLEN (KDWP) The National Wild Turkey
Federation's (NWTF) Kansas chapters have budgeted $52,600 from the state
Hunting Heritage Super Fund for outreach, education, conservation, increased
public land access, and other Kansas projects in 2010. The NWTF Super Fund is
administered jointly by the NWTF, its state and provincial chapters, and
wildlife agencies. In addition, the NWTF will make a second annual contribution
of $23,550 from national project funding, a different fund than the Hunting
Heritage Super Fund, to ongoing Rio Grande wild turkey research in northcentral
Kansas.
Approved projects include $25,000 to
uphold outdoor traditions through the NWTF's JAKES (Juniors Acquiring
Knowledge, Ethics and Sportsmanship), Women in the Outdoors and Wheelin'
Sportsmen outreach programs, educational programs, scholarship programs, and
the National Archery in the Schools Program.
NWTF Kansas state board of directors
dedicated an additional $27,600 to accomplish the following projects in 2010,
which will benefit Kansas resident and non-resident hunters and wildlife:
§ $7,425 to lease approximately
6,000 acres of land for spring wild turkey Walk-in Hunting Access Areas
statewide;
§ $6,000 to buy equipment
for new and existing 4-H Shooting Sports programs statewide;
§ $5,000 to improve timber
stands by cutting down undesirable trees in favor of oaks and other beneficial
tree species on the Flint Hills National Wildlife Refuge in Coffey County;
§ $3,500 to construct
fireguards, which are gaps in vegetation used to control prescribed burns, near
Douglas State Fishing Lake and the surrounding 538-acre wildlife area in
Douglas County;
§ $2,500 to restore
riparian areas on the Cimarron National Grasslands in Morton County by removing
salt cedars and other invasive plants that compete with healthy growth of
cottonwoods;
§ $2,000 to provide
archery equipment for the Liberal Parks and Recreation Department's youth
shooting program;
§ $1,500 to purchase
spraying equipment that will help land management professionals conduct
prescribed fires in the Bourbon County Conservation District;
§ $1,050 to purchase
native grass and forb seed that will be planted on Council Grove Wildlife Area
in Morris County;
§ $1,000 to restore native
prairie areas by removing invasive eastern red cedar trees from Pottawatomie
State Fishing Lake #1 Wildlife Area;
§ $625 to purchase
spraying rigs for prescribed fires in the Wilson County Conservation District;
and
§ $500 to help conduct a
forestry and wildlife workshop in western Kansas.
Including funding for the Rio Grande wild turkey research project, total
NWTF funds targeted for Kansas in 2010 is $76,150. Since 1985, NWTF chapters in
Kansas have raised and spent more than $796,961 on wildlife projects. For more
information on Kansas NTWF chapters and projects, go online to
nwtf.org/in_your_state/lists.php?STATE=KS
|